The Pear Tree Restaurant

Willingdon Heights

In a Nutshell

Sample a special menu of "elegant Canadian comforts," including pan-roasted local trout and Fraser Valley pork

The Fine Print

Promotional value expires Nov 1, 2014. Amount paid never expires.Limit 1 per person.
Valid only for option purchased.
Reservation required; subject to availability.
24hr cancellation notice required.
Dine-in only.
Entire party must order the five course meal.
Not valid for special events.
Valid only for prix-fixe menu.
HST and gratuity not included.Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services.

The Pear Tree Restaurant

The Pear Tree Restaurant has been invested in comfort ever since it opened nearly two decades ago, pairing its foams and confits with a tranquil and inviting setting in the suburbs. It’s also celebrated its connections with the wider local landscape, sourcing its vegetables from small farms in the area. Today’s Groupon invites you to sample The Pear Tree’s new-fashioned Canadian hospitality with a five-course Elegant Canadian Comforts menu for two or four. Dinner includes:

Warm carrot and brie foam scented with cardamom

Pan-roasted local trout with pommes dauphine

Canadian organic grain salad with chicken confit

Fraser Valley pork served three ways with parsnip purée and Pemberton fingerling potatoes

Caramel pots de crème with Valrhona chocolate-chip cookies<p>

No substitutions available for the menu.

Stark, geometric presentations let diners focus on each ingredient as it comes out of the kitchen and savor a spectrum of local flavors. The earthy tone is set by a light but rich foam of carrot and brie. Morsels of crisped potato and choux pastry lay beneath a second course of local trout—a dish that Vancouver Magazine called “a revelation”—displaying a knack for textural contrast that continues in the organic grain salad with melt-in-your-mouth chicken confit.

The star of the show may be the three different preparations of Fraser Valley pork—surrounded by more root vegetables—but dessert is no pushover, either. It’s hard to imagine a dish much more comforting than a pairing of custardy caramel pots de crème with cookies, the chips in which come from artisanal French chocolatiers Valrhona. That ingredient may be far-flung, but its producers operate in a way that’s familiar to The Pear Tree’s chef: they hand-pick the cocoa growers they work with to ensure a supply of ideal beans. Such careful attention to ingredients has won Jaeger bushels of praise from both restaurant reviewers and sustainability advocates, as well as the trust of under-ripe tomatoes.